View clinical trials related to Lymphoma, T-Cell, Peripheral.
Filter by:This is a non-randomized, open-label, Phase 1b clinical study to evaluate the safety, tolerability and anti-tumor efficacy of SHR0302 as monotherapy in patients with relapsed/refractory peripheral T/NK cell lymphoma. Around 7-18 patients will be subsequently enrolled into 3 different dose ascending cohorts. Additional 12-18 patients may be enrolled to further explore a selected dose defined by dose escalation cohorts.
Peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) is a highly heterogeneous and aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The incidence rate of PTCL in China is much higher than the global average, and there is no unified standard treatment for initial PTCL. Currently, the CHOP regimen is widely used as first-line treatment. However, the overall response rate is still low, and effective therapies need to be explored. Epigenetics and genetics jointly determine critical features of tumors, and exploring new treatment strategies and developing targeted drugs based on deep understanding of the pathogenesis is of significant importance. The combined application of DNMT inhibitors and HDAC inhibitors has strong scientific support. The Phase II clinical study of Mitoxantrone Hydrochloride Liposome in treating relapsed or refractory PTCL achieved positive results and regulatory approval. The CMOP regimen combining Mitoxantrone Hydrochloride Liposome with Chidamide is worth exploring for initial PTCL treatment.
The main aim of this study is to describe how effective and safe the re-treatment of adults with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) with brentuximab vedotin is. Another aim is to describe treatment patterns of persons with CTCL who have received brentuximab vedotin again. No treatment will be provided during this study. Information already existing in the participants' medical charts will be reviewed and collected.
AFM13-203 is a phase 2, open-label, multi-center, multi-cohort study with a safety run-in followed by expansion cohorts. The study is evaluating the safety and efficacy of AFM13 in combination with AB-101 in subjects with R/R classical HL and CD30-positive PTCL.
The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the benefit of continuous treatment with synthetic hypericin ointment (HyBryte) and visible light in patients with mycosis fungoides for up to 12 months (54 weeks). Funding Source: FDA OOPD.
Patients with newly diagnosed, pathologically confirmed NK/T-cell lymphoma of stage III-IV treated with XCOPL regimen. 3 weeks for a cycle, with a total of 6-8 cycles.
This is a phase II, open-label, non-randomized, single-arm, multicenter study to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and PK of chidamide in patients with R/R PTCL.
A multi-center, prospective clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of R-GDP plus PD-1 monoclonal antibody in the treatment of refractory or relapsed peripheral T cell lymphoma not otherwise specified and Angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma, which has previously shown promising efficacy.
NK/T-cell lymphoma (NKTCL) is one of the most common types of extranodal lymphoma.NKTCL originates from NK cells and T lymphocytes and is highly invasive. There is a lack of efficient and specific treatment methods in clinical practice, and the prognosis is poor. The molecular heterogeneity of NKTCL is strong, and molecular typing and risk stratification are of great significance for understanding the disease and improving the curative effect.Based on the preclinical studies of mitoxantrone liposomes, the investigators put forward a hypothesis: mitoxantrone liposome injection combined with pegaspargase, gemcitabine, and dexamethasone (P-GEMD) in the treatment of early non-upper respiratory digestive tract It is safe and can improve the therapeutic effect in patients with gastric or advanced extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma.
Intranodal follicular adjuvant T-cell lymphoma (nTFHL) is a type of peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) that is a new subtype in WHO 2022, which includes 3 categories corresponding to previous angioimmunoblast T-cell lymphoma (AITL), follicular T-cell lymphoma, and PTCL with TFH phenotype, named nTFHL-angioblast type ( nTFHL-AI), nTFHL-follicular (nTFHL-F), and nTFHL-non-specific (nTFH-NOS), respectively.1 nTFHL-AI has a relatively high incidence in PTCL, accounting for about 25-30% of cases, with an aggressive clinical presentation, often with multisystem involvement and with immune system abnormalities. nTFHL shares common immunophenotypic features, namely TFH cell phenotype: CD279/PD1, CD10, BCL6, CXCL13, ICOS, SAP, and CCR5, and at least 2 of the stated immune markers combined with CD4 positivity are required for the diagnosis of nTFHL.1, TFH cell and nTFHL cell also share similar reproducible genetic abnormalities, such as RHOA G17V, DNMT3A, IDH2, TET2, often involving epigenetic genetic abnormalities 2, especially abnormalities of DNMT3A, IDH2, and TET2 are more frequent in myeloid disorders. Basic studies have shown that cidabenamide and anthracyclines have synergistic effects to promote apoptosis in PTCL cells; and the adverse events of the two do not completely overlap, suggesting that a mitoxantrone liposome-based regimen combined with cidabenamide for PTCL may have a better clinical benefit. Based on the above findings, the investigators propose to further investigate the efficacy and safety of cidapenem combined with azacitidine and mitoxantrone liposome (CAM) regimen, i.e., cidapenem combined with azacitidine dual epigenetic modulation on the basis of mitoxantrone liposome, in the treatment of patients with R/R nTFHL using a randomized, prospective, multicenter phase II clinical trial, which is expected to further improve ORR, PFS and OS.